During the course of the 1950s England lost confidence in its rulers & convinced itself to modernise. The bankrupt steam-powered railway run by a retired general symbolised everything that was wrong with the country; the future lay in motorways & high speed electric
- or even atomic
- express trains. But plans for a gleaming new railway system ended in failure & on the roads traffic ground to a halt. Along came Dr Beeching forensically analysing the railways' problems & expertly delivering an expert's diagnosis
- a third of the nation's railways must go. This was the point at which the reality of modernisation dawned & rural England fell victim to the road & car
- at least that is how Dr Beeching is remembered today. Last Trains examines why & how the railway system contracted exposing the political failures that bankrupted the railways & examining officials' attempts to understand a transport revolution beyond their control. It is a story of the increasing alienation of bureaucrats from the public they thought they were serving but also of a nation that thinks it lives in the countryside trying to come to terms with modernity.